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Life sciences company GeniPhys adds president and CEO, and board chair

Life sciences company GeniPhys adds president and CEO, and board chair WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. GeniPhys Inc., a life sciences company focused on developing and commercializing proprietary collagen material technology developed in Purdue University professor Sherry Harbin’s laboratory, announced Tuesday (May 4) that Andrew S. Eibling has been appointed president and CEO and that attorney R. Matthew Neff has been appointed as chairman of the board of directors. Eibling brings 35 years of leadership experience in the pharmaceutical, CRO and medtech space, focused on business and corporate development. Most recently, he was vice president of business development and alliance management at Enable Injections. He previously was vice president of Enterprise Alliance Management at Covance. He began his career at Eli Lilly and Co., spending nearly 25 years in multiple roles of increasing responsibility. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue and a Master o

Questions remain on post-COVID outpatient care outlook

ZGF ARCHITECTS University of Illinois Health in Chicago broke ground on its Outpatient Surgery Center and Specialty Clinic in 2020. While just about everyone expects that healthcare will continue to push into outpatient settings, whether the pandemic is strengthening that trend depends on whom you talk to. “Yes, the outpatient growth was already booming prior to the pandemic. To assuage consumer concerns, there is a need for an increased number of ambulatory settings today,” Earl Swensson Associates, an architectural firm based in Nashville, said in its response to Modern Healthcare’s 2021 Construction & Design Survey. “No,” Gould Turner Group, an architectural, planning and interior design firm based in Nashville, said in its survey response. “If anything, the pandemic has caused office visits to decline, and we’ve seen an increase in telehealth visits.”

IMS vaccination clinics have not immunized as many as officials hoped

That meatball tastes like gasoline | Months after getting COVID, thousands develop strange smell and taste disorders

. The condition leaves patients with an altered sense of smell that often results in them detecting very unpleasant odors from things that usually smell good. Dr. Justin Turner, director of the Smell and Taste Clinic at Vanderbilt University, explained why the distorted smells occur: In COVID-19, the virus infects cells that provide nutrition and support to neurons inside the nasal cavity, and as those cells die off and no longer function, the neurons die too, Turner said. The cells can regenerate but that takes weeks or months and, in the meantime, they don t have connections to the brain and have to re-form connections.

Webinar: How IU Health is streamlining operations to improve financial performance

Sponsored Content Provided By Oracle This content was created by and paid for by an advertiser. The Crain s editorial department was not involved in the creation of this content. April 30, 2021 12:09 PM Webinar: How IU Health is streamlining operations to improve financial performance Thursday, May 27 at 11 AM PST Print While COVID introduced countless issues in the past year, it can’t be overstated that healthcare organizations have already had significant, long-standing complexities to manage that aren’t going anywhere. To address some of their most pressing operational challenges, Indiana University Health has undergone an enterprise-level transformation to improve tracking, operational insights, and reporting from within their their finance and supply chain functions. During this webinar, Tara Stone Gill of IU Health will join Oracle’s Kristen Miles to share the lessons IU Health has learned and the best practices they’ve established as they’ve forged new ways to

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